Dozier v. State

199 S.W. 287, 82 Tex. Crim. 321, 1917 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 361
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 14, 1917
DocketNo. 4586.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 199 S.W. 287 (Dozier v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dozier v. State, 199 S.W. 287, 82 Tex. Crim. 321, 1917 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 361 (Tex. 1917).

Opinion

DAVIDSON, Presiding Judge.

Appellant was convicted of murder and allotted thirty years confinement in the penitentiary.

The record is voluminous and contains a great many details unnecessary to state. The case in brief is, that appellant and deceased, young men, living in the same neighborhood, had long been intimate friends, socially and in business, deceased being twenty-one and appellant eighteen years of age. There had been trading between them, and checks passed from one to the other. Appellant had bought cattle from deceased, for which he had given a check for $150. The State shows deceased in possession of that check on the morning previous to the supposed time of the killing on the following evening. When his body was found this check was missing. On the morning previous to. the killing in the evening appellant was at the house of a sister of deceased and remained until about 2 o’clock, and assisted in hanging wall paper. It is shown that deceased called appellant over the phone twice before appellant agreed to go to the home of the deceased. The mother of *323 deceased testified that she did not see appellant but heard his voice as he rode np to the house calling to the deceased, asking him if he was ready, or words to that effect. They 'were supposed to have ridden together from the home of deceased. This was something like perhaps, between 2 and 3 o’clock in the evening. Deceased was never seen alive afterward. On the morning of the day on which deceased was killed appellant borrowed a shotgun from his brother-in-law and returned it the following day. The sister of deceased testified that while appellant was at her house assisting in hanging the wall paper she did not notice any pistol about him, and if he had one she did not discover it. It is in evidence that appellant sought to but failed to buy a pistol some time previous to the homicide. This was proved by a merchant. Appellant was never seen with a pistol, and the record discards the idea that he carried a shotgun on the day of the homicide. The deceased was killed by being shot in the back of the head with a rifle or pistol. The State’s theory was that deceased was killed by a pistol owned by appellant’s father, and the casé was prosecuted only upon that theory. There is considerable evidence in the record in regard to tracks of horses and men. It seems that they trailed these tracks on a road leading east from deceased’s home to the Brazos river. There the riders seemed to have alighted and led their horses across the river, the water being shallow and only fifteen or twenty feet in width. There is no evidence that 'the boots worn by the boys had been wet, so far as the writer recalls this testimony. After getting through the water there was some evidence of foot tracks on the sand in the bed of the river, the bed of the river being something like one hundred yards wide at that point, the water only covering a small portion of it. At a certain point these parties who made the foot tracks, from the testimony, mounted their horses; Witnesses testifying in regard to this matter state that the horses began running from that point. The State’s theory from the tracks was that the horse supposed to have been ridden by deceased was in front, followed by the horse supposed to have been ridden by appellant. This race continued about a mile. Seven or eight hundred yards of this was through thick brush and briers, brambles and undergrowth. The animal of the deceased the next day was found wandering around and was shown to have been ridden hard. Ho witness, as the writer recalls the record, testified that either of the animals had any scratches or abrasions upon them. After emerging from this thicket they entered rather an open wooded territory and ran by a plum thicket. After passing that a short distance there was found a pool of blood and deceased’s body was supposed to have been dragged from that point into the plum thicket about seventy-five yards away, and there left. There is also evidence showing that the animal supposed to have-been ridden by deceased was led from there to a wire fence by the rider of the other horse and turned outside. They trailed the tracks of the other horse from that point to the residence of appellant’s father, *324 where the appellant resided. This statement is only thought to be necessary by reason of the application for a continuance.

The State relied upon tracks, and the fact that the boys left the home of deceased in company, riding horses whose tracks fit those that were followed, one being shod all around supposed to have been ridden by appellant, and the other unshod all around, supposedly ridden by deceased. The sheriff following these tracks went to the home of appellant’s father and -called for any arms that might be in the house. Appellant was not at home, but his father was. His father gave permission to -examine the house, and also told the sheriff that he had a pistol in his trunk which he had had á long time. He unlocked his trunk and gave the pistol to the sheriff. This is the pistol around which the State made its case. It was a very large pistol, and showed to have been fired once more or less recently. The) testimony is at variance on the question of the length of time prior to this that it had been fired. The father of appellant' stated at the time he gave it to the sheriff there was one chamber that had been fired, and that he had fired it, and made mention of the circumstances. The sheriff with a chisel took two shoes from appellant’s horse, one from the left front and the other from the left hind foot. In wrenching them from the feet of the animal the shoes became twisted and warped. The sheriff with a hammer undertook to straighten them. He says he .compared these with the tracks he followed and they fit fairly well. The blacksmith who had shod the horse, whose name was McCann, took the other two shoes from the horse and followed these horse tracks and compared them. He took the shoes off as a blacksmith would, without injury to the shoes, and would have stated if present that they did not fit the tracks; that he followed the same tracks as did the sheriff and compared the shoes with the tracks.

Appellant made an application for continuance on account of the absence of his father and McCann. The father was served, but was sick, furnishing the certificate of a doctor to that effect, and his inability to attend the trial. There was an affidavit filed to the same effect. McCann had left the State temporarily on a business errand a day or two before the process could be served. A sufficient statement of the facts expected to be proved by these absent witnesses has been made, except alibi by McCann. The State, to meet this condition, agreed to the taking of the depositions of the father of appellant and let it be used before the jury. Appellant would not consent to this unless the State would agree that the testimony was true. To this the State would not agree. The contention was also made that the diligence was insufficient. This is the first application, and the diligence is not so strict in regard to the first as it is to subsequent applications for continuance. Certainly, it could not be said otherwise because he was served with process in ample time and at the same time all the other witnesses were served, and all attended who were served except *325 the father. We think the evidence shows diligence in the issuance of process for the witness McCann. He lived but a few miles from the courthouse.

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115 S.W.2d 684 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1938)
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18 S.W.2d 158 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1929)
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269 S.W. 782 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
199 S.W. 287, 82 Tex. Crim. 321, 1917 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dozier-v-state-texcrimapp-1917.